Matalo appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 1.85:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. This turned into a fairly positive presentation.
Overall delineation worked fine. While some aspects of the image leaned a little soft, the movie usually showed appealing accuracy.
I saw no signs of jagged edges or moiré effects, and edge haloes remained absent. Grain felt natural – if a little heavy – and the other than a few small specks, the movie lacked print flaws.
As with most Westerns, a sandy palette dominated, with only sporadic instances of brighter hues. This made sense within the film’s setting and the disc reproduced the colors in a largely satisfying manner.
Blacks appeared fairly deep and dense, while shadows came across as mostly smooth. Expect a generally high-quality image.
As for the movie’s LPCM monaural audio, it seemed typical for the era’s Italian soundtracks. This meant the standard dubbed dialogue, but given the nature of Matalo, that became less of a distraction than usual.
As noted, Matalo didn’t come devoid of speech, but it went with many fewer lines than the average movie. Dialogue seemed awkwardly integrated and stiff, but again, the fact so much of the film delivered no spoken material left this as less of an issue.
The rest of the mix followed the standard patterns, with effects that sounded dull but fairly clean, with only a little distortion. Music didn’t present great range but the score felt adequately reproduced. This turned into another acceptable mix that never sounded better than okay.
A few extras appear, and we get an audio commentary from film historians Nathaniel Hawthorn and Troy Howarth. They provide a running, screen-specific discussion of the movie’s genre, cast and crew, and some production elements.
As becomes the case with three of the four commentaries that accompany the movies in the “Blood Money” collection, this one tends to focus on a broad look at how the film fits into the Spaghetti Western field – or “Italian Western”, as Howarth and Hawthorn prefer. This may disappoint those who want specifics about Matalo, but I won’t complain too much.
Veterans of the format, Howarth and Hawthorn almost always provide engaging, lively chats, and that trend continues here. They deliver a nice overview of the genre and turn this into a solid commentary.
Three featurettes follow, and The Movie That Lived Twice goes for 16 minutes, nine seconds. This offers an introduction to Matalo from journalist/critic Fabio Melelli.
Like his three prior intros, Melelli touches on genre domains and details about Matalo. Inevitably, some of this repeats from the commentary, but Melelli nonetheless delivers a pretty positive chat with enough fresh material to make it worth a look.
A Milanese Story spans 44 minutes, 42 seconds. It delivers notes from filmmaker Davide Pulici.
Here we get info about Matalo director Cesare Canevari’s life and career. With nearly 45 minutes at his disposal, Pulici manages to create a positive summary.
Lastly, An Untold Icon goes for 39 minutes, 28 seconds. In this reel, we hear from musician/disc collector Lovely Jon.
“Icon” discusses composer Mario Migilardi and his score for Matalo. Like other chats with Jon, this one provides a solid overview of its subject matter.
In addition to the film’s trailer, we find an Image Gallery. It presents 14 stills related to the movie’s promotion.
Arguably the weirdest Spaghetti Western ever made, Matalo deserves lots of credit for its daring nature and willingness to break from genre confines. However, it loses its way too quickly and ends up as a noble but spotty experiment. The Blu-ray brings largely positive picture as well as acceptable audio and a mix of bonus materials. I’m glad I saw the trippy Matalo but I don’t think it really works as a film.
Note that this release of Matalo comes only as part of a four-film package called “Blood Money Volume 2”. In addition to this movie, it brings three other Spaghetti Westerns: $10,000 Blood Money, Vengeance Is Mine and Find a Place to Die.